Participatory GIS a tool for land and water management

20
MENARID Knowledge Exchange workshop 24th to 28th of March, Hammamet, Tunisia H. Jazi National Project Manager MENARID, Iran 1 Participatory GIS a tool for land and water management

description

Participatory GIS a tool for land and water management. MENARID Knowledge Exchange workshop 24th to 28th of March, Hammamet , Tunisia H . Jazi National Project Manager MENARID, Iran. Description of the innovation. Participatory GIS as a tool for land and water management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Participatory GIS a tool for land and water management

Page 1: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

MENARID Knowledge Exchange workshop24th to 28th of March, Hammamet, Tunisia

H. JaziNational Project ManagerMENARID, Iran

1

Participatory GISa tool for land and water management

Page 2: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Description of the innovation

• Participatory GIS as a tool for land and water management

• Yazd, Iran

• This method is practiced in one village and it is going to be repeated for other villages in the area.

2

Page 3: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Description of the innovation (2)

• Lots of dispute over land tenure • 32 hectare divided into 359 parcels with the average of 0.09 ha.

• Planning for INRM needs information and tools• Traditional knowledge and community information have to be

analyzed via suitable tools • Monitoring is a part of INRM which is possible through map

and its attributes updating process• Map is of powerful means for visualization of the points toall parties to understand the main problems • Consensus over maps should made by stakeholders

3

Page 4: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

• Differences between government and local people over state rangelands and forests.• Conversion of range and forest to other land

uses• Differences between local people• Water management is difficult and confusing

due to smallness of the land parcels• Water demand increases and upstream-

downstream story is started

4

Dispute over land tenure and water

Page 5: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Method• Cause and effect analysis workshop on water shortage problem

was held • Based on root analysis we agreed to get insight into the current

situation through mapping• Preparation of the concept note, instruction and TOR papers• Contracting a local expert • A local active group aware of traditional irrigation system and

land tenure status was formed by rural development committee • Preparation of the map• Re-consulting meeting with local community for map review• Make the consensus over the map, boundaries and water paths• Projects like proper water running system via pipes and

improvement of cropping system were design 5

Page 6: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Consulting process and assignments

6

Page 7: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Involvement of active group

7

Page 8: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Preparation of the map in the field

8

Page 9: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Maps and overlaps

9

Page 10: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Maps and geo-referencing

10

Page 11: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

11

Lets discuss the result

Page 12: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Lets discuss the result

12

Page 13: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Attribute tables

•All forms of information were collected and put in tables•Demographic data were collected via questioners and added to the tables

13

Page 14: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Result

• Creation of the common ground for government and local people for land tenure issue• Updateable database for future change

detection• Fundamental information for INRM• Participation of rural people help them to

find out about their resources and limitation• Planning projects based on the innovation 14

Page 15: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Maps are on the wall of rural development office to be used for projects planning

15

Page 16: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Tangible result

• Local people were complain on water scarcity, now they understand that having a proper management plan will lead to excess of water

16

Page 17: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

SWOT analysis resultsStrengths of your organization when the innovation has been implemented

Weaknesses of your organization when the innovation has been implemented

Opportunities (external factors from the environment)

Threats(external factors from the environment)

• Integration of indigenous knowledge and modern techniques

• Participatory approach

• Training the youth

• Involvement of NGO

• Lack of up to date air born images

• Indigenous knowledge

• Dispute over water use management

• New challenges are inevitable when land and its boundary get more clear and precise

17

Page 18: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Recommendations to policy-makers to scale-up the innovation, and to remove constraints

18

• Indigenous knowledge and new technologies could be used in an integrated manner

• Resource management need correct information and should be prepare with the people

• A monitoring system should be provided to the local people using maps and GIS

Page 19: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Thanks for your attention

19

Page 20: Participatory  GIS a tool for land and water management

Let us discuss it ! Questions, comments and suggestions are welcome!

20